- #36
Jano L.
Gold Member
- 1,333
- 75
Demystifier, thanks for support and suggestions, I'll look into it.
Still, it is interesting that so many old famous calculations were partially successful with jumps without any comment on how they happen.
For example, take Einstein's quantum theory of radiation. He used jumps of atoms to derive the form of Planck's formula. Dirac published paper where he says he can even calculate probabilities of these jumps from Schroedinger's equation.
But in thermal radiation, nobody is measuring anything on the atoms, and the spectrum of radiation does not even have line character, so there is no question of the act of observer on the wave function.
Is there any reason known in decoherence theory, why the environment should force the atoms into certain preferred discrete states, like those assumed by Einstein? It seems to me that superpositions are equally good states when everything is chaotic.
Still, it is interesting that so many old famous calculations were partially successful with jumps without any comment on how they happen.
For example, take Einstein's quantum theory of radiation. He used jumps of atoms to derive the form of Planck's formula. Dirac published paper where he says he can even calculate probabilities of these jumps from Schroedinger's equation.
But in thermal radiation, nobody is measuring anything on the atoms, and the spectrum of radiation does not even have line character, so there is no question of the act of observer on the wave function.
Is there any reason known in decoherence theory, why the environment should force the atoms into certain preferred discrete states, like those assumed by Einstein? It seems to me that superpositions are equally good states when everything is chaotic.